Determination of Tannin in Green Tea Infusion by Flow-Injection

A flow-injection analytical system was developed to determine tannin content in green tea infusions. The flow-injection system is based on measuring t...
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J. Agric. Food Chem. 2005, 53, 8443−8446

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Determination of Tannin in Green Tea Infusion by Flow-Injection Analysis Based on Quenching the Fluorescence of 3-Aminophthalate RICHIE L. C. CHEN,† CHUN-HSUN LIN,† CHIEN-YU CHUNG,† TZONG-JIH CHENG*,†,‡

AND

Department of Bio-Industrial Mechatronics Engineering, College of Bio-resources and Agriculture, and Department of Biomedical Engineering, National Taiwan University Hospital, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan

A flow-injection analytical system was developed to determine tannin content in green tea infusions. The flow-injection system is based on measuring the quenching effect of tannin on the fluorescence of 3-aminophthalate. Fluorophore was obtained by auto-oxidation of luminol during solution preparation. System performance was satisfactory for routine analysis (sample throughput >20 h-1; linear dynamic range for tannic acid, 0.005-0.3 mg/mL; linear dynamic range for green tea tannin, 0.02-1.0 mg/ mL; CV < 3%). The flow-injection method is immune from interference by coexisting ascorbate in green tea infusion. Analytical results were verified by the ferrous tartrate method, the Japanese official analytical method. KEYWORDS: Flow-injection; tannin; fluorescence; quenching; luminol; 3-aminophthalate; green tea

INTRODUCTION

Tannin is the major secondary metabolite of high-order plants, and these polyphenol-related chemicals are thought to be principal molecular defense mechanism against herbivores and viruses (1). Some herbivores have evolved or culturally adapted to the astringent taste of some tannins and developed speciesspecific habitual ingestion behaviors (2). Tea is perhaps the most obvious human example of such adaptation. Therefore, tannin content is a reasonable and important parameter for evaluating tea quality and that of commercialized products. Several academic studies have identified positive physiological effects and health promotion characteristics of tea tannin (3). Consequently, a reliable and convenient method for quantifying tea tannin is urgently required for both quality control and health concerns. The Folin method was adopted in the U.S. as the official method for analyzing tannin (4, 5); however, this redox-based method is susceptible to interference from coexisting reducing ingredients (6). Ascorbate is among the most problematic reducing chemicals in fresh plant tissue; therefore, tannin content in unfermented green tea cannot be determined with the official U.S. method. Because unfermented green tea, sencha, is the most popular tea product in Japan, the ferrous tartrate method was chosen (7). The Japanese official method is based on complex-formation with tannin, and its analytical results are not affected by coexisting ascorbate content.

As rapid, economic, and versatile, many flow-injection methods are automated and commercialized (8). There is also a recent tendency to adopt flow-injection methods as official analytical methods. However, in a preliminary study by the authors, adapting the ferrous tartrate method to a flow-injection format caused precipitation inside the manifold; therefore, methods based on different mechanisms require investigation. Luminol (5-amino-2,3-dihydro-1,4-phthalazinedione) is a common and cheap chemiluminescence reagent (9, 10). Cui et al. developed a sensitive flow-injection tannin assay based on inhibiting Cu2+-catalyzed luminol chemiluminescence (11). Similar approaches have been applied for different analytical purposes (12). However, such oxidative chemiluminescence reactions are still affected by interference from reducing compounds, and the flow rate (>12 mL/min in the manifold in the study by Cui et al.) must be sufficiently high to immediately catch a decaying luminescence signal. In the proposed approach, the fluorescence-quenching effect of tannin on oxidized luminal, 3-aminophthalate, was employed to quantify tannin content. Because a fluorescence signal is stable and very easy to handle with a flow-injection manifold, flow-rate can be tuned only by considering sample dispersion. More significantly, the fluorescence-quenching effect does not involve redox processes, a benefit for samples containing high ascorbate levels. MATERIALS AND METHODS

* Author to whom correspondence should be addressed [telephone +8862-33665345; fax +886-2-23627620; e-mail [email protected]]. † College of Bio-resources and Agriculture. ‡ National Taiwan University Hospital, College of Medicine.

Chemicals and Solutions. Luminol (5-amino-2,3-dihydro-1,4phthalazinedione), sodium bicarbonate, and potassium dihydrogen phosphate were purchased from Nacalai Tesque, Japan. Ammonium

10.1021/jf051077f CCC: $30.25 © 2005 American Chemical Society Published on Web 09/30/2005

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J. Agric. Food Chem., Vol. 53, No. 22, 2005

Chen et al.

Figure 1. Schematic representation of the proposed FIA manifold. P, peristaltic pump; V, injection valve (20 µL); MC, mixing coil (20 cm); FD, fluorescence detector (excitation wavelength ) 340 nm; emission wavelength ) 425 nm; slit ) 10 nm). ferrous sulfate hexahydrate, potassium sodium (+)-tartrate tetrahydrate, and tannic acid were obtained from Wako Co., Japan. Sodium hydroxide was from Union Chemical Co., Taiwan. All chemicals were of analytical reagent grade and used as received. Deionized water with conductivity 10. For baseline stability and signal sensitivity, a system pH of 10.0 was adopted. System Performance. Under optimal conditions (0.4 mM luminol in 0.1 M carbonate buffer, pH 10.0; flow-rate, 0.5 mL/ min), the detection limit was 0.001 mg/mL (S/N > 3), and the linear range for tannic acid was 0.005-0.3 mg/mL (r2 ) 0.9896). Relative standard deviations (n ) 5) of the signals of 0.1 mg/mL tannic acid were